A 'Mystery' Presidential Candidate Could Be Entering the 2016 Race

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In a last-ditch effort to derail Donald Trump as the Republican Party nominee, a conservative pundit says that the GOP establishment may introduce a "mystery" Independent candidate to run against him and Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election.

Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol tweeted this on Sunday:

Just a heads up over this holiday weekend: There will be an independent candidate--an impressive one, with a strong team and a real chance.

An independent run could potentially split GOP votes, increasing the likelihood of a Clinton victory and liberal nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court, as Trump pointed out to Kristol in his follow-up tweets.

Bill Kristol has been wrong for 2yrs-an embarrassed loser, but if the GOP can't control their own, then they are not a party. Be tough, R's!

And as of Tuesday morning, Kristol still wasn't done.

Kristol may have jumped the gun with his announcement.

An inside source who's been involved in the effort to recruit a candidate to run against Trump and Clinton told CBS News that it could be several weeks before the new nominee is introduced. The conservative pundit's tweets came on the heels of an Associated Press tally showing Trump with more than the 1,237 delegates required to secure the GOP nomination.

Although Independent candidates have never won a presidential election, they have managed to tilt them — take Green Party candidate Ralph Nader whose 2000 presidential run cost Democratic nominee Al Gore the race, or Independent candidate Ross Perot's run in 1992.

The only third-party candidate with the potential to steal votes from Clinton is former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, but he's made it clear that he doesn't intend to run. Someone who may be a hurdle, however, is the newly nominated Libertarian candidate New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, whose recent poll numbers reach near 10 percent in a hypothetical race against Trump and Clinton.